logo
They're not the prettiest, but they survived 2 extinction events

They're not the prettiest, but they survived 2 extinction events

Yahoo16-04-2025

Garbage in, garbage out. High protein, low fat. Cut the carbs and stay hydrated.
It turns out it does matter what you eat, especially to crocodylians — crocodiles, alligators and gharials — a species researchers say persisted despite two mass extinction events because they adapted their diet and the places where they found food.
'Lots of groups closely related to crocodylians were more diverse, more abundant, and exhibited different ecologies, yet they all disappeared except these few generalist crocodylians alive today,' said the lead author Keegan Melstrom. 'Extinction and survivorship are two sides of the same coin. Through all mass extinctions, some groups manage to persist and diversify. What can we learn by studying the deeper evolutionary patterns imparted by these events?'
Researchers reconstructed their dietary ecololgy by examining the teeth and skulls of 99 extinct crocodylomorph species and 20 living crocodylian species.
The research is the first to reconstruct the dietary ecology of crocodylomorphs to identify characteristics that helped some groups persist and thrive through two mass extinctions — the end-Triassic, about 201.4 million years ago, and the end-Cretaceous, about 66 million years ago.
Their study was published in the journal Paleontology on Tuesday.
'Despite being stereotyped as 'living fossils', the characteristics that facilitated their survival remain largely unknown, but trends in other clades, such as mammals, suggest that dietary ecology may play a key role in persisting during and after mass extinctions,' an abstract of the study said.
Earth has gone through five mass extinctions in its history — and experts would argue we are undergoing a sixth — so the gritty survival of these toothy animals may provide tools on how to better protect vulnerable species today.
Take the gharial, with its long, thin jaws it uses to feed on fish. Populations were once distributed across Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Myanmar, Nepal and Pakistan. It currently survives in several severely fragmented populations in India and Nepal and is down to less than 250 in numbers.
It thrives in big rivers and with its elongated snout and interlocking teeth, adults can quickly snatch a fish. Juveniles munch on insects, crustaceans and frogs.
Males can reach up to 20 feet in length, but you don't have to worry about this gigantic creature chasing after you on land because of its weak leg muscles. When it does move across land, think of belly slides.
The species is critically endangered, with India granting full protection in the 1970s. Habitat fragmentation, the damming of rivers and hunting are all factors that have this animal on collision course for extinction.
Melstrom, an assistant professor at the University of Oklahoma, teamed up with Randy Irmis, curator of paleontology at the Natural History Museum of Utah and a professor in the University of Utah's Department of Geology & Geophysics, to conduct the research probing the dietary ecology of the species that for now have withstood all the tribulations of time.
'We propose that one reason for the success and longevity of the crocodylomorph clade is their remarkable dietary flexibility, a characteristic that is still observed in living crocodylians,' the study says.
A clade is a grouping that includes a common ancestor and all the descendants (living and extinct) of that ancestor.
The team studied a fossil dataset that spans six continents and 200 million years of evolutionary history.
'Crocodylomorphs have survived two major mass extinctions and may be on the cusp of a third,' the research said, underscoring the need for better conservation practices and using science to help stave off extinction.
As an example, the gharials are a keystone species indicating the health of an entire river-based ecosystem.
Wildlife SOS says to save the species, you need to save their home.
Controlled repopulation efforts have been successful to a degree.
In 2024, 160 gharial eggs hatched across the Gandak River in Nepal after intense monitoring by federal officials, scientists and volunteers. The Gandak is a major left bank tributary of the Ganges in India.
But ultimately, the key to ensuring the long-term survival of this ancient species lies in restoring balance to the affected ecosystem and, of course, ensuring they stay on the right diet and adapt.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Zion museum's new temporary exhibit delves into research on end-Triassic extinction
Zion museum's new temporary exhibit delves into research on end-Triassic extinction

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Yahoo

Zion museum's new temporary exhibit delves into research on end-Triassic extinction

SPRINGDALE, Utah () — A new, temporary exhibit featuring research on the Triassic and Jurassic periods is available at the Zion Human History Museum. It features research on geoscience and extinction, as well as a model phytosaur skull. The new exhibit will bring guests through the late Triassic period, the end-Triassic Extinction, and the beginnings of the Jurassic period, between 227 to 180 million years ago. This is the culmination of a seven-year research project involving scientists from all over. Dr. Celina Suarez, a geoscience professor at the University of Arkansas, led the team. The rocks at Zion National Park were key to this research, as they were used to study and understand the climate change that led to the end-Triassic Extinction. Two Utah campgrounds included in list of 50 Favorite Places to Camp in America Right Now: Hipcamp According to a press release from Zion National Park, Dr. Suarez and her team identified 'a spike in CO2 levels in the park's Moenave Formation.' Using this information, the scientists were able to pinpoint a rapid increase in volcanic eruptions that led to the supercontinent Pangea splitting. 'We've got to look at the geologic past and all these past events to understand where we're going in the future,' Dr. Suarez is quoted in a press release. 'If we can just get one or two people that come and visit Zion to understand that … I've done my job.' Alongside that discovery, which is mirrored in sites all around the world, Dr. Suarez and the team of scientists found that the CO2 spike would also cause wildfires and 'intense weather patterns' that led to the End Triassic Extinction, which wiped out 'approximately 80 percent of all marine and terrestrial species on Earth,' according to the release. 10 hikes with stunning wildflowers across Utah The new exhibit at the Zion History Museum was built on this research, and was created by a collaboration between scientists, artists, and partners. Zion National Park extends a special thanks to the Zion Forever Project, St. George Dinosaur Discovery Museum, the Utah Geological Survey and the National Science Foundation in their release. 'None of us could have done anything to this scale by ourselves,' Robyn Henderek, the park's physical scientist, is quoted. 'We all had a role to play in this process.' For more information about visiting this new exhibit, visit . Orangutan at Utah's Hogle Zoo expecting baby this month Trump and Musk feud escalates Tariff battle continues Zion museum's new temporary exhibit delves into research on end-Triassic extinction One person dead following accident on Highway 89 near Utah-Sanpete county line Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Gray Fossil Site celebrates 25-year anniversary
Gray Fossil Site celebrates 25-year anniversary

Yahoo

time31-05-2025

  • Yahoo

Gray Fossil Site celebrates 25-year anniversary

GRAY, Tenn. (WJHL) – What started as a small discovery in 2000 is now a popular attraction in the Tri-Cities. 25 years after that discovery, the Gray Fossil Site continues to evolve, with new discoveries every day. On Saturday, the Fossil Site kicked off its 25th anniversary celebration, a milestone many couldn't believe had already arrived. 'Most people are like, 'No way, I can't believe it's been 25 years since that time,'' said Executive Director Blaine Shubert. 'But to really update the public on all of the amazing discoveries that we've actually had and also showcase some of the new exhibits we've developed, too.' Throughout the event, ETSU Paleontology students, fossil site employees and volunteers presented their research to the public. Schubert said with the recent addition of the Hands On! Discovery Center, the site has evolved into a place of learning for all. 'So you have these two entities in one place and an academic program to where the students are getting to be involved in not only things like excavation, but building exhibits, doing outreach programs here at the museum,' he said. 'And so we just continue to grow and diversify.' Recent ETSU graduate and Collections Assistant Derek Den Ouden said he's thankful to have been a part of the site's 25-year history. 'It's been really fantastic and awesome to be a part of the broader gray fossil site experience and contribute my name to the legacy that we've established over the past 25 years,' he said. Now that the site has reached the 25-year milestone, Den Ouden said he's excited to see what the next 25 years will bring. 'We're always digging and there's always some surprise,' he said. 'So I'm really hopeful that we'll find some really exceptional stuff in the next 25 years.' Schubert said Saturday's event is the kick-off for a year-long celebration. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Birds have been nesting in the Arctic Circle for almost 73 million years, newly discovered fossils reveal
Birds have been nesting in the Arctic Circle for almost 73 million years, newly discovered fossils reveal

Yahoo

time30-05-2025

  • Yahoo

Birds have been nesting in the Arctic Circle for almost 73 million years, newly discovered fossils reveal

When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. Birds have been nesting in rugged Arctic environments for almost 73 million years, new research finds — more than 25 million years longer than was previously thought. A collection of more than 50 fossils found in northern Alaska, which include embryos and hatchlings, suggest some of the early ancestors of modern birds either migrated or adapted to the harsh polar environment in the Mesozoic era, the age of dinosaurs. "The common conception is they're too primitive to be exhibiting this advanced behavior," Lauren Wilson, lead author of the study and a doctoral student of paleontology at Princeton University, told Live Science. "So you're either dealing with [Arctic winters] as an itty-bitty, freshly hatched bird, or you're 3 months old, and having to fly about 2,000 kilometers [1,240 miles] to get to a point where it makes sense to even migrate," Wilson explained. "I don't think we would expect either of those things from these birds that don't belong to that modern lineage of birds." Whether the birds migrated south or hunkered down for the winter, the research provides the earliest known evidence of either behavior in birds. And while some modern birds, like the ivory gull (Pagophila eburnea) and snowy owl (Bubo scandiacus) are known to nest in the frigid Arctic, there is now evidence that this behavior started millions of years before the meteor that wiped out non-avian dinosaurs crashed into Earth, if not earlier. "Many birds nest in the Arctic today, and they are key parts of Arctic communities and ecosystems and food webs," Steve Brusatte, a professor of paleontology and evolution at the University of Edinburgh who peer-reviewed the study but was not involved in it, told Live Science in an email. "These fossils show that birds were already integral parts of these high latitude communities many tens of millions of years ago, and thus that these communities are a long-term norm of Earth history, not a recent ecological innovation of modern times." The fossils in the collection come from at least three different families of bird: the extinct, loon-like hesperornithes; ichthyornithes, an extinct bird that resembled seagulls; and several species resembling ducks that are within or very similar to neornithes, the group containing all modern birds. Related: Hoatzin: The strange 'stinkbird' born with clawed wings that appears to be an evolutionary 'orphan' Notably, the researchers did not find any fossils of the dominant bird group of the Cretaceous period (145 million to 66 million years ago) — enantiornithes, now-extinct birds that typically had teeth in their beaks and claws on their wings. But a few factors reveal why they likely didn't live in the Arctic. They likely took longer than other birds to incubate their eggs, they took several years to reach full adult size (where most modern birds grow to adult size within weeks) and they "may have had a period where they're almost naked because they molted their feathers simultaneously," which is not helpful during an Arctic winter, said study co-author Daniel Ksepka, a paleontologist and curator of the Bruce Museum in Connecticut. The world was warmer in the Late Cretaceous than it is today, but the region the birds were found in likely experienced freezing temperatures, snow and roughly four straight months of winter darkness. Growing to adulthood so quickly allowed modern birds to practice long-range migration and prosper during those ancient Arctic summers, which boasted around six months of 24-hour daylight and a burst in insect populations. But the weather wasn't the only challenge. They lived alongside "probably about 12 or 13 different kinds of typical dinosaurs," like the Pachyrhinosaurus, a relative of Triceratops that was about 16 feet (5 meters) long and weighed 2 tons (1,800 kilograms). Other dinosaurs like Troodon, an 11-foot tall meat-eater with short, serrated teeth, "would have happily taken advantage of a bunch of these little cute little chicks for dinner," said Patrick Druckenmiller, director of the University of Alaska Museum of the North and advising author of the study. RELATED STORIES —Chickens sprouted dino-like feathers when scientists messed with the Sonic Hedgehog gene —Why don't all birds fly? —Ancient duck-like creature discovered in Antarctica may be the oldest modern bird ever discovered To get to the fossil sites in the Prince Creek Formation in Northern Alaska, the researchers drove 500 miles (800 km) from Fairbanks, chartered a small aircraft to fly to the Colville River, then took inflatable motorboats up the river before setting up camp, Druckenmiller said. There they would look for an "orangey, pebbly, sandy" layer of sediment that contains small bones and teeth, and often lay on the permafrost to "excavate with little dental picks and small tools" from the layer itself. Now that the Prince Creek Formation is "one of the major North American Cretaceous bird sites," according to the researchers, Wilson says the next step is simply to find more fossils. "The more bones we find, the more confident we can be in exactly what types of birds we have," she said. "We might even still find a random bone that's from a bird we didn't know was there."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store